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Cosmic Acceleration Reaffirmed: Study Refutes Slowdown Theory
16 Jun
Summary
- Researchers confirm universe expansion is still accelerating.
- Study rebuts findings suggesting cosmic expansion is no longer speeding up.
- Type Ia supernovae observations were key to confirming the acceleration.

A fresh analysis of stellar explosion data has reaffirmed the long-held understanding that the universe's expansion continues to accelerate. This finding challenges recent research that suggested the cosmic expansion rate was no longer increasing. The study, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, utilized observations of Type Ia supernovae, cosmic mile markers that help measure vast distances.
These Type Ia supernovae, which occur when a white dwarf star is destroyed, provided crucial data for calculating cosmic distances and the expansion rate over time. The Big Bang initiated the universe's expansion approximately 13.8 billion years ago, with dark energy hypothesized as the force driving its acceleration since 1998. This invisible force is estimated to constitute 68% of the universe's contents.
The current study refutes findings from a paper published last year which argued dark energy was weakening. The researchers behind the new study found no evidence of an 'age effect' in supernova distance calibration, a key argument of the opposing research. Despite challenges, the team is confident in their methodology, anticipating future observatories like the Vera Rubin Observatory and Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will offer further insights into dark energy's nature.